Three Essays on Modeling Complex Dynamic Problems in Health and Safety

Essay #1 – Factors influencing the risk of falls in the construction industry: a review of the evidence Falls are a significant public health risk and a leading cause of nonfatal and fatal injuries among construction workers worldwide. A more comprehensive understanding of casual factors leading t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hu, Kun
Other Authors: Industrial and Systems Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27621
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05092011-164536/
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-27621
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Literature synthesis method
dynamic disease models
disease transmission
outbreak response
individual-based (IB) model
spellingShingle Literature synthesis method
dynamic disease models
disease transmission
outbreak response
individual-based (IB) model
Hu, Kun
Three Essays on Modeling Complex Dynamic Problems in Health and Safety
description Essay #1 – Factors influencing the risk of falls in the construction industry: a review of the evidence Falls are a significant public health risk and a leading cause of nonfatal and fatal injuries among construction workers worldwide. A more comprehensive understanding of casual factors leading to fall incidents is essential to prevent falls in the construction industry. However, an extensive overview of causal factors is missing from the literature. In this paper, 536 articles on factors contributing to the risk of falls were retrieved. One hundred twenty-one (121) studies met the criteria for relevance and quality to be coded, and were synthesized to provide an overview. In lieu of the homogeneity needed across studies to conduct a structured meta-analysis, a literature synthesis method based on macro-variables was advanced. This method provides a flexible approach to aggregating previous findings and assessing agreement across those studies. Factors commonly associated with falls included working surfaces and platforms, workers’ safety behaviors and attitudes, and construction structure and facilities. Significant differences across qualitative and quantitative studies were found in terms of focus, and areas with limited agreement in previous research were identified. Findings contribute to research on the causes of falls in construction, developing engineering controls, informing policy and intervention design to reduce the risk of falls, and improving research synthesis methods. Essay #2 – Review of quantitative studies of interventions for responding to infectious disease outbreaks We reviewed the modeling and retrospective literature on responding to outbreaks of infectious diseases in humans and animals. Unlike routine immunization and control efforts, outbreak response activities require rapid reactive actions to address an urgent or emergent situation. We focused our review on characterizing the types of diseases analyzed, the interventions used, and the models employed. Out of the 211 studies identified, we find that the majority focus on a few diseases (influenza, foot and mouth disease, smallpox, measles, and hepatitis). We identified 34 distinct interventions explored in these studies that fall under the general categories of vaccination, prophylaxis, quarantine/isolation, contact restriction, exposure reduction, killing/slaughtering, and surveillance. A large number of studies (141) use simulation/analytical models to analyze outbreak response strategies. We identify key factors contributing to the effectiveness of different interventions that target high-risk individuals, trace infected contacts, or use a ring to delineate geographical boundaries for an intervention. Essay #3 – Development of an individual-based model for polioviruses: implications of the selection of network type and outcome metrics We developed an individual-based (IB) model to explore the stochastic attributes of state transitions, the heterogeneity of the individual interactions, and the impact of different network structure choices on the poliovirus transmission process in the context of understanding the dynamics of outbreaks. We used a previously published differential equation-based model to develop the IB model and inputs. To explore the impact of different types of networks, we implemented a total of 26 variations of six different network structures in the IB model. We found that the choice of network structure plays a critical role in the model estimates of cases and the dynamics of outbreaks. This study provides insights about the potential use of an IB model to support policy analyses related to managing the risks of polioviruses and shows the importance of assumptions about network structure. === Ph. D.
author2 Industrial and Systems Engineering
author_facet Industrial and Systems Engineering
Hu, Kun
author Hu, Kun
author_sort Hu, Kun
title Three Essays on Modeling Complex Dynamic Problems in Health and Safety
title_short Three Essays on Modeling Complex Dynamic Problems in Health and Safety
title_full Three Essays on Modeling Complex Dynamic Problems in Health and Safety
title_fullStr Three Essays on Modeling Complex Dynamic Problems in Health and Safety
title_full_unstemmed Three Essays on Modeling Complex Dynamic Problems in Health and Safety
title_sort three essays on modeling complex dynamic problems in health and safety
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27621
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05092011-164536/
work_keys_str_mv AT hukun threeessaysonmodelingcomplexdynamicproblemsinhealthandsafety
_version_ 1719340587798233088
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-276212020-09-26T05:30:14Z Three Essays on Modeling Complex Dynamic Problems in Health and Safety Hu, Kun Industrial and Systems Engineering Rahmandad, Hazhir Smith-Jackson, Tonya L. Triantis, Konstantinos P. Thompson, Kimberly M. Literature synthesis method dynamic disease models disease transmission outbreak response individual-based (IB) model Essay #1 – Factors influencing the risk of falls in the construction industry: a review of the evidence Falls are a significant public health risk and a leading cause of nonfatal and fatal injuries among construction workers worldwide. A more comprehensive understanding of casual factors leading to fall incidents is essential to prevent falls in the construction industry. However, an extensive overview of causal factors is missing from the literature. In this paper, 536 articles on factors contributing to the risk of falls were retrieved. One hundred twenty-one (121) studies met the criteria for relevance and quality to be coded, and were synthesized to provide an overview. In lieu of the homogeneity needed across studies to conduct a structured meta-analysis, a literature synthesis method based on macro-variables was advanced. This method provides a flexible approach to aggregating previous findings and assessing agreement across those studies. Factors commonly associated with falls included working surfaces and platforms, workers’ safety behaviors and attitudes, and construction structure and facilities. Significant differences across qualitative and quantitative studies were found in terms of focus, and areas with limited agreement in previous research were identified. Findings contribute to research on the causes of falls in construction, developing engineering controls, informing policy and intervention design to reduce the risk of falls, and improving research synthesis methods. Essay #2 – Review of quantitative studies of interventions for responding to infectious disease outbreaks We reviewed the modeling and retrospective literature on responding to outbreaks of infectious diseases in humans and animals. Unlike routine immunization and control efforts, outbreak response activities require rapid reactive actions to address an urgent or emergent situation. We focused our review on characterizing the types of diseases analyzed, the interventions used, and the models employed. Out of the 211 studies identified, we find that the majority focus on a few diseases (influenza, foot and mouth disease, smallpox, measles, and hepatitis). We identified 34 distinct interventions explored in these studies that fall under the general categories of vaccination, prophylaxis, quarantine/isolation, contact restriction, exposure reduction, killing/slaughtering, and surveillance. A large number of studies (141) use simulation/analytical models to analyze outbreak response strategies. We identify key factors contributing to the effectiveness of different interventions that target high-risk individuals, trace infected contacts, or use a ring to delineate geographical boundaries for an intervention. Essay #3 – Development of an individual-based model for polioviruses: implications of the selection of network type and outcome metrics We developed an individual-based (IB) model to explore the stochastic attributes of state transitions, the heterogeneity of the individual interactions, and the impact of different network structure choices on the poliovirus transmission process in the context of understanding the dynamics of outbreaks. We used a previously published differential equation-based model to develop the IB model and inputs. To explore the impact of different types of networks, we implemented a total of 26 variations of six different network structures in the IB model. We found that the choice of network structure plays a critical role in the model estimates of cases and the dynamics of outbreaks. This study provides insights about the potential use of an IB model to support policy analyses related to managing the risks of polioviruses and shows the importance of assumptions about network structure. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:11:48Z 2014-03-14T20:11:48Z 2011-05-02 2011-05-09 2011-05-18 2011-05-18 Dissertation etd-05092011-164536 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27621 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05092011-164536/ Hu_K_D_2011.pdf Hu_K_D_2011_Copyright.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech